Edmonton Journal

WHAT’S NEXT FOR BREXIT?

Britain’s Parliament has told Prime Minister Theresa May she can file for divorce from the European Union. Now comes the hard part — the arguments, the lawyers, the squabbles over money.

- Jill Lawless, The Associated Press

HOW TO FILE FOR DIVORCE

The bill passed by Parliament late Monday authorizes the British government to invoke Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty, which says a member state may “notify the European Council of its intention” to leave the bloc. Later this month, May is expected to send the notificati­on to Council President Donald Tusk and then announce the news, probably to Parliament. Article 50 says that two years from the moment of notificati­on, “the Treaties shall cease to apply” and Britain will no longer be an EU member.

WHOSE MOVE IS IT NOW?

The timing of Article 50 was up to Britain. What happens next is up to the EU. Tusk says that that once EU officials get Britain’s notificati­on, they will respond within 48 hours, offering draft negotiatin­g guidelines for the 27 remaining member states to consider. Leaders of the 27 nations will then meet to finalize their negotiatin­g platform; if Article 50 is triggered this week, the meeting will be on April 6. “Then we meet and we start,” U.K. Brexit Secretary David Davis said Sunday. “And I guess the first meeting, bluntly, will be about how we do this? How many meetings, you know, who’s going to meet, who’s going to come.” Substantia­l talks may have to wait until after France’s two-round April-May election for a new president.

THE MOST URGENT ISSUE?

Britain’s vote to leave the EU has meant uncertaint­y for 3 million EU citizens living in the U.K., and 1 million Britons who reside in the 27 other nations of the bloc. Both sides agree that providing a guarantee that they will be able to stay where they are is a top priority.

THE MAIN CONFLICTS

The first major battle is likely to be about money. The EU says Britain must pay a hefty divorce bill of up to 60 billion euros ($64 billion), to cover EU staff pensions and other expenses the U.K. has committed to. Britain hasn’t ruled out a payment, but is sure to quibble over the size of the tab. There’s also likely to be friction over Britain’s desire to have free trade in goods and services with the bloc, without accepting the EU’s core principle of free movement of workers. Britain has said it will impose limits on immigratio­n, and so will have to leave the EU’s single market and customs union. That makes some trade barriers seem inevitable.

WHEN WILL IT BE OVER?

Under the terms of Article 50, Britain will cease to be an EU member in March 2019. But EU negotiator­s warn it could take two years just to settle the divorce terms; agreeing a new relationsh­ip between the U.K. and the EU could take years longer. If the rest of the EU agrees, the two-year negotiatin­g period can be extended, with Britain still in the EU. Or, the two sides could agree on a transition­al period. There’s also a chance Britain could walk away early without a deal if it thinks talks are going nowhere.

IS THIS A ONEWAY TICKET?

The British government has said firmly that it will not backtrack on Brexit. But it’s unclear whether Article 50 is legally reversible. Former British ambassador to the EU John Kerr, who wrote Article 50, says “it is not irrevocabl­e. You can change your mind while the process is going on.”

 ?? DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE / GETTY IMAGES ?? Commuters cross Westminste­r Bridge, backdroppe­d by Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament in central London.
DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE / GETTY IMAGES Commuters cross Westminste­r Bridge, backdroppe­d by Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament in central London.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada